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Exploring the Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems
c International Astronomical Union 2013
Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 299, 2013
M. Booth, B. C. Matthews & J. R. Graham, eds.
doi:10.1017/S174392131300759X
Spin-Orbit Angles as a Probe to Orbital
Evolution
A. H. M. J. Triaud1 , A. Collier Cameron2 , D. Queloz3 , D. R.
Anderson4 , D. J. A. Brown2 , B. Smalley2 , F. Bouchy3 , M. Lendl3
and M. Gillon5
1
Department of Physics, Kavli Institute of Astrophysics & Space Research, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
2
SUPA, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews, North Haugh, St
Andrews, Fife KY16 9SS, UK
3
Observatoire Astronomique de l’Université de Genève, 51 Chemin des Maillettes, CH-1290
Sauverny, Switzerland
4
Astrophysics Group, School of Physical and Geographical Sciences, Lennard-Jones Building,
Keele University, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK
5
Institut d’Astrophysique et de Geéophysique, Université de Liège, Allée du 6 Août, 17 (Bât.
B5C) Sart Tilman, B-4000 Liége, Belgium
Abstract. We observed with HARPS, the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect for 40 of the 75 transiting hot Jupiters discovered in the Southern Hemisphere by WASP. Our observations reveal a
wide distribution in orbital inclinations indicative of past dynamical interactions. Our data also
demonstrate the important effect produced by tidal interactions in shaping the spin–orbit (β)
angle distribution. We briefly present and interpret the data we collected in a series of graphs.
Keywords. binaries: eclipsing, planetary systems, techniques: radial velocities
The Rossiter-McLaughlin effect is observed using radial velocities and occurs when a
planet transits its host star. From its shape we can measure the projected angle onto the
sky, called β (or sometimes λ in literature), between the stellar spin axis and the planet’s
orbital axis (Gaudi & Winn, 2007).
Fig. 1a & b show that the fraction of aligned to misaligned objects is larger when planets orbit stars that have a massive outer convective layer (red triangles) corresponding
to Teff <6150 K. Tides are dissipated more effectively when there is an outer convective
layer (Zahn 1977). Winn et al. (2010) have postulated that tides have changed the distribution in spin-orbit angles of planets orbiting stars <6150K, but left the distribution
intact for systems >6350K. It is still unclear whether a putative misaligned population
of planets orbiting the colder stars could tidally realign or would instead tidally infall
into the star, and only leave the mostly aligned population that is observed today.
Fig. 2a only displays planets orbiting the “cold star” sub-sample against a proxy for the
strength of tidal interactions: a/R . We observe that the weaker the tides the more likely
misaligned orbits occur. As a recent addition, we point towards WASP-80b, who orbits
a K7-M0 star. Although the coldest in our sample, it is observed on an inclined, circular
orbit just like hot Jupiters orbiting mid F stars (Triaud et al. 2013). This indicates hot
Jupiters may have been more frequently misaligned in the past. No pattern with a/R is
visible for the sample orbiting hotter stars. This is expected: tides are weakened due to
the lack of an outer convective layer. But stars >1.2M are known to cool as they age
on the main sequence. As they cool they develop an outer convective layer. We should
therefore expect a change of spin–orbit angle (β) distribution, as one planet, originally
399
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400
A. H. M. J. Triaud et al.
Figure 1. a) updated from Winn et al. (2010). The spin–orbit angle β as a function of effective
temperature of the host star. Symbols are shaped and colour-coded as a function of Te ff . Filled
symbols represent our HARPS results. Open diagrams come from other observations efforts. b)
show cumulative distribution for each of the different symbol shapes. Top curve is for Te ff <
6150 K (red triangles), middle for 6150 Te ff < 6350 K (purple squares), bottom for Te ff 6350 K (blue discs), with the black cumulative representing the total population. The variety of
angles indicate the presence of a process leading some planets onto highly inclined orbits.
Figure 2. a) updated from Albrecht et al. (2012): spin-orbit angle β as a function of a/R
only selecting object orbiting stars cooler than 6150 (red triangles in Fig. 1a). a/R is obtained
directly from the transit geometry. It is also a parameter that determines the strength of tides,
with the tidal timescale τ ∝ (a/R )−6 . The larger a/R is, the weaker the tides. b) reproduced
from Triaud (2011); spin orbit angle β as a function of the system’s age for primaries >1.2M .
Objects older than 2.5-3Gyr are aligned. Ages obtained from the literature.
on the hot side of Fig. 1 will move to the cold side and realign thanks to the development
of an outer convective layer on the star. This is what is displayed in Fig. 2b.
References
Albrecht, S., Winn, J. N., Johnson, J. A., et al. 2012, ApJ 757, 18
Gaudi, B. S. & Winn J. N. 2007, ApJ, 655, 550
Triaud, A. H.M. J. 2011, A&A 534, L6
Triaud, A. H. M. J., Anderson, D. R., Doyle, A. P., et al. 2013, A&A 551, A80
Winn, J. N., Fabrycky, D., Albrecht S. & Johnson, J. A. 2010, ApJL 718, L145
Zahn, J.-P. 1977, A&A 57, 383
Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 88.99.165.207, on 15 Jun 2017 at 04:08:37, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available
at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S174392131300759X